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Audra L. Boone, Erik Lie, Yixin Liu
Time trends and determinants of the method of payment in M&As Journal of Corporate Finance 27 (2014) Audra L. Boone, Erik Lie, Yixin Liu
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Hypothesis development
Introduction 01 Hypothesis development 02 contents Sample 03 Empirical results 04 Summary 05
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Section one Introduction
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Problem statement The author examine the time trends and determinants of the method of payment in M&As spanning four decades. They use explanatory variables linked to adverse selection theory, taxation, and contracting costs to explain this trend. They also want to show that mixed payments are not merely hybrids between cash and stock payments,but have unique determinants and features.
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Research reason Payment Surge in M&A mixed payment
There has been a dramatic increase in M&A activity in recent decades, yet the prominent studies of the payment choice are based on small samples before the surge. The author study a period spanning four decades,which allows us to observe longer-term time trends in the payment choice and affords an extensive sample to examine the determinants of the choice. Payment mixed payment The studies before pay only cursory attention to mixed payments, which have represented an essential part of M&A activity in recent years and come with unique features.
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Hypothesis development
Section two Hypothesis development
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Hypothesis development
H1: Adverse selection implies that the fraction of stock increases with (i) relative size and (ii) the value uncertainty of the acquirer and the target firms. (To measure value uncertainty, they use the standard deviation of stock returns. In addition, with the logic that firms with high market-to-book ratios and high recent stock returns have greater intangibles and growth opportunities that are harder to value.) H2: The taxation of target shareholders implies that stock payment should be more likely when the capital gain of the target is high and when the capital gains tax rate is high. (They use the maximum capital gains tax rate at the time of the deal as a proxy for the capital gains tax rate. ) H3: Costly contracting implies that the fraction of stock increases with the correlation of returns between the acquiring and target firms.
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Section three Sample
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Sample The acquisitions are announced from January 1985 to October The source of sample is the Securities Data Company's (SDC) Mergers and Acquisitions database. The sample require that : (i) the acquiring firm sought 100% of the shares of the target firm, (ii) the status is known and not pending, (iii) both the target and the acquiring firm are publicly traded and have available information on CRSP and Compustat, the target shares are ordinary common shares, (v) the payment only includes cash and/or stock, and (vi) any mixed payment includes at least 10% cash and 10% stock. This process leads to a total sample of 2590 observations.
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Section four Empirical results
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Empirical results Descriptive statistics
The stock price reaction to announcements of stock deals is on average negative for the acquirers, even when a mix of stock and cash is used, whereas the stock price reaction to announcements of cash deals is on average positive for the acquirers. Therefore , on the basis of the stock price reactions for both the acquiring and target firms, the mixed payment deals are more similar to stock deals than to cash deals.
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Empirical results Multinomial logit regression
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Empirical results Adverse selection:
Relative size: Consistent with Hansen's (1987) adverse selection model, the larger the target relative to the acquirer, the less likely it is for the acquirer to make an all-cash offer relative to both all-stock offers and mixed offers. MTB ratio&stock price: When acquirers have experienced a large stock price run-up during the prior year and have a high market-to-book ratio, they are more likely to use stock to pay for the takeover, especially in relation to pure cash. Uncertainty value:The findings suggest that acquirers make all-stock or partial stock offers when the uncertainty about their own value is greater.(1) Bidder managers use equity as payment when they have an informational and they believe the acquirer is overvalued by the market ,and cash when they do not possess much of an informational advantage or their informational advantage leads them to believe that the stock is undervalued.(2) acquirers use more stock as payment in the face of high uncertainty regarding the target value, because this payment structure forces the target shareholders to share any post-acquisition loss in the case that the target is overvalued.
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Empirical results Taxation :
Consistent with the tax hypothesis, a higher capital gains tax rate reduces the probability of all-cash offers relative to all-stock offers and the probability of mixed offers relative to all-stock offers. There is compelling evidence that some cash deals were rushed to occur before increases in capital gains tax rates,presumably to reduce the tax burden for target shareholders. Perhaps capital gains taxes are sufficiently important that they affect the timing of some acquisitions that are bound to occur anyway, but not important enough to dictate the terms, including the payment method, of the acquisitions. Tax rate increase ˇ
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Empirical results Costly contracting :
The costly contracting suggests that costly renegotiation would be less likely if the values of the firms are highly correlated and stock is the medium of payment. Consistent with the costly contracting hypothesis, they find the higher the return correlation across the acquirers and targets, the more likely a mixed offer relative to an all-cash offer.
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Empirical results Time trends:
Their prediction model can explain some of the time trends in payment methods, but not all. Reason: (1) prediction model does not include variables that should have been included, either because they cannot easily be measured or because they have failed to identify them. (2) propensities cannot be explained by measures designed to capture traditional theories for the payment choice.
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Section five Summary
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Summary and conclusion
They report evidence consistent with the adverse selection theory in which the fraction of stock increases with the valuation uncertainty of the acquirer and the target firms. They find compelling evidence that a looming tax rate increase expedites some pure cash deals. However,consistent with past studies, the evidence that capital gains taxation affects the choice of payment method is more tenuous. Finally,They report that our explanatory variables can explain some of the observed time trends in the payment methods,but not all.(On this basis, they conclude that the last couple of decades have witnessed a rise in the use of both cash and mixed payments that is attributable to an increased propensity to pay target shareholders with at least some cash. )
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